Researcher Says Nationalists in Cahoots with Authority

By Sergey Chernov

The St. Petersburg Times

Published: April 9, 2014 (Issue # 1805)

Photo: Sergey Chernov / SPT

More than 20 nationalist and extremist organizations are active in the city and comprise around 1,300 active “soldiers,” St. Petersburg police chief Sergei Umnov told the Legislative Assembly when he presented his report for 2013 on Apr. 2.

Dmitry Dubrovsky, a researcher at the Russian Museum of Ethnography and an expert on nationalist groups, said the numbers sounded as if they had been minimized. He added that the terms used by Umnov were too vague.

“It’s not clear how they count these individuals because it became evident in 2011 and 2012 that this bunch could easily mobilize 5,000 to 6,000 people at any given time,” Dubrovsky told the St, Petersburg Times via Skype from Amsterdam this week.

“It looks like [the police] seriously think that [these types of people] carry membership cards and pay dues. [Umnov] does not know what ‘identity’ means. Apart from that, it’s not clear what Umnov’s definition of ‘extremist groups’ is either because there’s an interesting difference [in his report]. He’s talking about around 1,000 nationalists and around 1,300 extremists. Who are the remaining 300? Are they football fans or anti-fascists whom they also see as ‘extremist’?”

Russian President Vladimir Putin introduced anti-extremism legislation in 2008. Since then, it has been criticized as being a means to fight political opposition, while counter-extremism police units launched the same year that are known as “Center E” were dubbed “Putin’s political police” by the opposition.

“Just about anything can be classified as extremism in Russia,” Dubrovsky said.

“As [film director and human rights activist] Alexei Simonov put it, ‘Extremism is disagreement with superiors, expressed bluntly.’ That’s why they are earnestly following anti-fascists and young liberals that don’t belong to officially recognized organizations. So I would treat these numbers [with caution], I truly don’t understand how they arrive at them.”

Police chief Umnov explained that the increase in nationalist sentiment stemmed from a rise in immigration levels and an increase in crimes committed by immigrants. “In such situations, any spark, any conflict can provoke large-scale clashes,” Umnov was quoted by the BaltInfo news agency as saying. “What it may lead to was shown by the events of the past autumn.”

On National Unity Day on Nov. 4, 2013 — a national holiday introduced by the Kremlin in 2005 as a replacement for the main Soviet holiday, October Revolution Day marked on Nov. 7 — an outbreak of ethnically-motivated violence took place.

A retrospective of the films of Roman Polanski starts today at Loft-Project Etagi, 74 Ligovsky Prospekt, with a screening of ‘Repulsion’ at 7 p.m. and ‘Rosemary’s Baby’ at 9:15 p.m. The series runs through Feb. 4 and will include Polanski's eminently creepy ‘The Tenant,’ the cult comedy ‘The Fearless Vampire Killers’ and ‘Cul-de-sac’ among others. Tickets are 150-200 rubles and the complete schedule is available at www.vk.com/artpokaz/